Diet The tub gurnard is an opportunistic predatory species which feeds on benthic prey, particularly crustaceans and smaller fishes. According to a study in the northwestern Mediterranean, the largest part of their diet were crustaceans, mostly
Decapoda and especially
crabs, with species such as
Goneplax rhomboides and
Liocarcinus spp. and
caridean shrimps in the genus
Philocheras, while the fish taken in the study were dominated by
European anchovy (
Engraulis encrasicolus) and
black goby (
Gobius niger). Crustaceans were a more important part of the diet in the summer and fishes gained importance during the winter. They are also known to take
molluscs and polychaetes. Also small teleosts which are ray finned fish may be preyed upon by the tub gurnard. At an intraspecific level, data suggests resource partitioning between juveniles and adults that change from preying on crustaceans to a piscivorous diet. It is believed that this fish will flare out its brightly colored pectoral fins to put on view or to startle potential predators.
Reproduction The tub gurnard
spawns between May and July in the northern parts of its range, They have also been shown to spawn from May until September ranging with 100000 to 300,000 pelagic eggs in the Georgian coasts of the Black Sea. Having pelagic eggs allows the females to have their young in open wide spaces and closer to the shore. The eggs are described as being round, smooth and not sticky. The species is dioecism means that each individual either has female or male reproductive parts, along with performing external fertilization. The male and female form a distinct pair to spawn. Once they hatched into their larval form, the mouth was observed to be undeveloped, but the simple gut was visible. Numerous chromatophores extended continuously in small patches along dorsal and ventral margins of the primordial fin. The big difference in size is attributed to the fact that body size is less important for males in terms of fitness, leaving them to be much smaller during maturity. Overall the maximum age reported for a Tub gurnard was at 15 years.
Vocalizations Tub gurnards make grunting or growling sounds, using the muscles associated with the
swim bladder, these sounds are thought to be used to keep the
schools together. Their name comes from the old French word 'gornard' meaning 'grunter' or to 'grunt'. Recent studies have shown that these 'grunts' vary greatly and are used for communication. ==Fisheries==